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Limits on the trapping of atmospheric CH4 in martian polar ice analogs

✍ Scribed by Melissa G. Trainer; Margaret A. Tolbert; Christopher P. McKay; Owen B. Toon


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
318 KB
Volume
208
Category
Article
ISSN
0019-1035

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✦ Synopsis


Recent detection of methane (CH 4 ) on Mars has generated interest in possible biological or geological sources, but the factors responsible for the reported variability are not understood. Here we explore one potential sink that might affect the seasonal cycling of CH 4 on Mars -trapping in ices deposited on the surface. Our apparatus consisted of a high-vacuum chamber in which three different Mars ice analogs (water, carbon dioxide, and carbon dioxide clathrate hydrates) were deposited in the presence of CH 4 gas. The ices were monitored for spectroscopic evidence of CH 4 trapping using transmission Fourier-Transform Infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy, and during subsequent sublimation of the ice films the vapor composition was measured using mass spectrometry (MS). Trapping of CH 4 in water ice was confirmed at deposition temperatures <100 K which is consistent with previous work, thus validating the experimental methods. However, no trapping of CH 4 was observed in the ice analogs studied at warmer temperatures (140 K for H 2 O and CO 2 clathrate, 90 K for CO 2 snow) with approximately 10 mTorr CH 4 in the chamber. From experimental detection limits these results provide an upper limit of 0.02 for the atmosphere/ice trapping ratio of CH 4 . If it is assumed that the trapping mechanism is linear with CH 4 partial pressure and can be extrapolated to Mars, this upper limit would indicate that less than 1% is expected to be trapped from the largest reported CH 4 plume, and therefore does not represent a significant sink for CH 4 .


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